Love Life with Matthew Hussey - (Matt Monday): How to Stop Obsessing in Early Dating
Episode Date: November 11, 2024How do you stop obsessing over someone you’ve recently started dating? When someone seems to tick all our boxes, it can be hard to NOT become flooded with thoughts of a possible future together. We... anxiously wait for their text. We put them on a pedestal . . . and as a result, potentially push them away. In this week’s episode, I share 5 things you can do to stop falling for someone too quickly. By following these steps, you’ll be able to keep your value and actually enjoy dating instead of getting stuck in anxiety. ►► Ask Matthew AI Your Biggest Dating Question for Free Now at. . . → http://www.AskMH.com ►► Order My New Book, "Love Life" at → http://www.LoveLifeBook.com ►► FREE Video Training: “Dating With Results” → http://www.DatingWithResults.com
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Matt, I've met this amazing person.
They're incredible.
Chemistry is unbelievable.
I've never felt this way before.
But he's moving to Thailand. If you've clicked on this video, it probably means that you've met someone you like and that person
has taken over your brain. We all know this feeling. You meet someone, you're excited about
what could be, they fulfill a lot of qualities that you want in a
person. And you get that immediate excitement of, what if this is it? What if this is the person
I've been looking for? What if the key to my happiness and my future lies with this person?
We feel disappointed anytime we get a text from someone who's not them, secretly praying every
second of the day that they are about to
reach out to us. Anything that doesn't involve them suddenly feels dull and gray, even if it
mattered deeply to us yesterday. And then we try to distract ourselves. We try to go to friends,
family, work, anything that can get us out of this mindset. But I know the feeling. It can feel like
you're sitting with friends trying to happily go about your day and all you can think about is this person. It is maddening. It makes dating unenjoyable because we live in that anxious state. And it can feel like if we don't make this work, we'll never be happy again. All of this leads to obsessive rumination, which at best makes it impossible
to enjoy the process of getting to know someone and at worst risks pushing something good away.
And today I want to talk about five things that you can do if you are struggling with this
obsessive rumination about someone you like. And by the way, the third point I'm gonna make on this
might be one of the most practical things
you hear on this subject anywhere.
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this Friday. First, let's explore one of the key psychological phenomenons that is responsible for us getting
too obsessed and too anxious about someone early on in the dating process. It is known as the
halo effect, and Britannica defines the halo effect as follows. The halo effect, the cognitive bias
in which an impression formed from a single trait or
characteristic is allowed to influence multiple judgments or ratings of unrelated factors.
What this essentially means is when we see a couple of things that create a positive impression
about a person, we are far more likely to deduce, rightly or wrongly, other positive things about
them from those initial impressions. Now, this is extremely dangerous. It can mean that we attribute
all sorts of wonderful qualities to a person that they haven't yet earned and have nothing to do with
the original qualities that we were impressed by. The halo effect is
extremely prominent in our love lives where we meet someone who is charismatic
or good-looking or super successful and immediately we take these qualities and
use them to build out a 360 degree picture of a person that may be completely
false. So let's talk about the five things we can do to negate this effect so that we can bring a
much more powerful version of ourselves to our love lives. Number one, don't optimize for looks,
money, or lifestyle. There has been a TikTok trend going around of late about this idea of people
wanting trust fund, six foot five, blue eyes as their description of the partner they want.
I fail most of those tests. I have slightly blue eyes. That's it. But most people, 99.9% of people fail that test. That to me is an example of taking
things that some people put a premium on like looks, money, and lifestyle, and trying to maximize
those things instead of creating a baseline for what they want in those areas. This is the
difference, by the way, between maximizing
and satisficing. Satisficing is when you have enough of something. Maximizing is when you try
to get the very most you can possibly get of something. But this misunderstands the way human
beings work, that we're never getting a quality in a person. We're getting an entire suite of qualities in a person, a package. So if we're
trying to maximize in one to three narrow areas, we are almost certainly going to ignore some major
deficits in other really important areas. The trick, in other words, is to know how much we need
of a thing. Do I need someone who's rich enough to buy a boat or someone who's made enough money that they don't need mine? What's the level that we need in those areas? I'm not a fan of advice
that talks about these things being completely unimportant because we have to work with ourselves
the way we actually are as human beings, not the way we'd like ourselves to be. We all want
chemistry on some level. We all want a feeling of security on some level.
How much of these things we want is personal.
And we have agency in it.
We can decide when enough is enough.
If we don't, we will always find ourselves over-indexing for certain things that actually drop in their importance past a certain point. Because someone being the
best looking person in every room or the tallest person we can find is not going to determine your
quality of life 5, 10, 20 years from now in a relationship with that person. But if we don't
think about that, we will end up chasing someone relentlessly who makes us very unhappy. Someone whose character
along the way we have completely ignored. There's a great moment in Catch Me If You Can, that movie
with Leonardo DiCaprio and Tom Hanks, where Leonardo DiCaprio playing Frank Abagnale talks
about why the Yankees always win. He says it's because the other team can't stop staring at their damn pinstripes.
And we act like that in dating as well.
It feels like in some ways the people who are extraordinarily gifted with their looks or their bodies or with their finances can win because people are always looking at their pinstripes.
They're always looking at the surface. They're never exploring the deeper character and values
that would make that person either a wonderful partner
or a terrible partner.
The second important way that we can lower our temperature
and get less obsessed about someone in early dating
is to lose the urgency.
Urgency can quickly become our enemy.
This is true in all walks of life. Advertisers can
come along and try to make you urgently buy something. When we go on a date with someone,
we can have our own internal sense of urgency that says, I have to move fast with this person
because otherwise they might get taken off the market. We see this when we think, I have to go
on a date with this person tomorrow because otherwise someone else might snap them up. We get taken out of the mindset of actually assessing this person,
learning this person, and into the mindset of simply trying to get this person because we've
already made our minds up. Another great example of this is when we go to rent a property or buy
a house. If we walk in and we fall in love and we imagine a life in that house because it's all so perfect,
we stop paying attention to the house. We forget that for all we know, there's mold that's going
to create headaches for us for a long time to come trying to fix. It could be that there are
expensive fixes or structural problems that the inspection is going to bring up when it happens
in three weeks. All sorts of things could still go wrong
with this, but instead we've made up our mind. And when we make up our mind, we suddenly get
ourselves into all sorts of trouble because we think I want it now. And it doesn't matter what
comes up in the inspection weeks from now. We may even convince ourselves that even if something
does come up in the inspection, we'll fix it. It's fine. The house is amazing. Have you ever done
that in a relationship? Have you ever done that in a dating scenario? We'll fix that part. This
person's amazing. We stop paying attention because the urgency is something that often gets us into
trouble, pain, heartbreak, and suffering by giving time and attention to the wrong people. People we
don't even know we really want yet. This idea brings
me on to point number three, which is one of the most practical things you can do when you're trying
to stop anxiously obsessing over someone. Be less impressed. In that urgency I was talking about,
we very quickly form a story of how amazing someone is. But if we actually stop to pay attention, to become mindful
and present with what's going on in this person's behavior, the way they show up in different
moments, not just on that one amazing date we had with them or in that amazing moment of lovemaking.
If we actually start to look at how they are holistically in their life, we will inevitably
see things that make them human. And those things can make them less impressive. And I actually
don't mean this in a negative way. I mean it in a very positive way. It's not like we're looking
for all these faults with people so that we can tell ourselves that they're awful. It's that we
need to take them off of the angelic pedestal and put them back on the level of human. Because when they're back on that level,
we no longer have the same sense of fear in dealing with them. We no longer think that it
would be the end of the world if we lost them. And we stop over-respecting this person like
they're perfect and we're awful. So start paying more attention to the moments
where they say or do something that gives you pause.
Where they spoke to someone in a way that you go,
oh, I don't really like that.
Or they reacted to something in a way where you went,
that was a little strange.
Or I don't like that side of them as much.
Start actually paying attention to those details
because it allows you to just bring
the scales to a more level place. Even if they're awesome, it allows you to bring the scales to a
slightly more level place where you can actually start interacting with this person as yourself
again, not as someone trying to impress this incredible being. And that ability to see them
as they are, to distinguish yourself from
the other people that they may have had in their lives that just have the halo effect where they
see them as perfect and instead be someone who sees them as they are, that actually makes you
special to them. That makes you a more unique person. Someone who sees them as they are. And
that's one of the things that makes
relationships so beautiful, is being seen by someone and accepted for who we really are.
You can't give someone that gift if you've put them on an impossible pedestal. It's worth noting
that when you do start realizing that people aren't perfect, you'll inevitably see that there
are things that you might want to speak with them about, things that they did that you don't perfect, you'll inevitably see that there are things that you might want to
speak with them about. Things that they did that you don't like, ways that you're being treated
right now that you would like to remind them of your standard on. And a lot of people are intensely
uncomfortable with the kind of awkward tensions and mini confrontations that can come from just
speaking up about things that you don't like in
the dating process. I haven't got time in this video because this is already long enough without
it, but this is where it's crucial to learn how to have standards and boundaries and communicate
them. So I've put together a free guide for anyone who has something they want to say right now,
but doesn't know how to say it, at boldstandards.com.
It's free, go check it out.
It makes a great partner
with everything I'm talking about here.
The fourth way we can eliminate our obsessing about someone
is to stop burying the lead.
In the last point, we talked about being less impressed,
allowing someone's imperfections to be as visible to you as the things that we
think make them perfect, thus creating a more rounded human. In this case, I'm talking about
imperfections that are actually things that disqualify this person or this thing from being
capable of making you happy. For example, someone says to you, I don't want a
relationship. I'm not at that place in my life right now. Or they say they never want kids when
that's something that's massively important to you. Or they say after their third date and having an
incredible time with you, I'm moving to Thailand tomorrow for the next two years. When you hear
these things, it's incredibly tempting
to bury the lead. I have coached people for 17 years and most of the time when people come to
me, they will say, Matt, I've met this amazing person. They're incredible. We have amazing sex.
We can't stop talking to each other. The chemistry is unbelievable. I've never felt this way before.
And they'll talk about all of these amazing things.
I, in the back of my mind, am always waiting for the but, because I know there's a but coming or
they wouldn't even be asking the question. So they'll say all of those things. And then
after saying all of the things that make this person perfect, they'll say, but he's moving to Thailand tomorrow.
That is burying the lead because the headline of this story is person is moving to Thailand
tomorrow, not worth having a relationship with them. But instead someone has made the headline,
how they feel about this person often because of the very qualities that create the halo effect.
I think this person is amazing in these qualities that create the halo effect. I think
this person is amazing in these ways, so the halo effect makes me think that they would be amazing
for a relationship. But anyone who's not available for a relationship can't be amazing for a
relationship. So we have to start asking ourselves, what is the lead that I've been burying that might
make this person not worth stressing about at all.
And by the way, and this is a video for another time,
it's worth noting that for some people,
the reason they obsess in the first place is because someone isn't available,
which is an instinct that has nothing to do with valuing someone
because of how inherently valuable they are,
but instead valuing them
simply because they are unavailable. All right, you've made it this far to point number five in
how to reduce your anxiety and the obsessive rumination when you like someone. I want to talk
to you about the goose and the golden eggs. Most people have heard the fable at some point or
another, the goose is laying golden eggs
and the farmer thinks that this is amazing,
you know, I'm getting rich off of these eggs.
But at a certain point starts making the mistake
of thinking that the value is in the eggs,
not the goose who's laying the eggs.
We often make that mistake in our lives.
We think that our value is in the eggs that we've laid. Now, there are all sorts of golden eggs that we lay in our lives. We think that our value is in the eggs that we've laid. Now,
there are all sorts of golden eggs that we lay in our lives. Sometimes it's a career opportunity
that we went out and fought for and finally got that interview for that amazing job.
Sometimes it's money we've made. Other times it's a love interest. You know, we went out one night
and we put on our nice clothes and we
made ourselves look good and we had the courage to go and speak to someone. And because of that,
we now find ourselves texting with someone or we find ourselves on a date. And if God forbid,
we decide we like that person, we start seeing them as the golden egg. But our focus of what's
most valuable shifts in a really dangerous way. We stop looking in the mirror
at the golden goose, the one who actually laid the egg, the one who made it happen,
the one who created the opportunity. Instead, we start looking at that name that's in our phone
of that person we just texted, thinking that's where the value really is. That's what's really important. In other words, we transfer
our value from ourselves to something on the outside. But when we do that, our perception
of what is most valuable starts to drift in a really dangerous way. When we start telling
ourselves that the most valuable thing about me is on the outside of me, we transfer the locus of our power
from here to here, to a person, a thing, an opportunity. When we do that in dating,
we have suddenly made our entire emotional ecosystem beholden to how this person treats us,
whether they text us back, whether they decide they want to be with us. Now to correct this,
there's two ways of looking at it and both of them can be valid. The first one is to realize
that if you laid one golden egg, you can lay other golden eggs to realize that you're powerful,
that it's not the case that every great thing in your life you got through luck,
you got it because you're you, because you make things happen, because you're wonderful,
you're awesome. There are wonderful things about you that attract other wonderful
things in life. So you don't need to freak out and worry that you'll never be able to do this again
because you did it. So you can do it again. But even if you can't quite do that exact same thing again, it still makes sense to see the value as being in the goose.
Because the goose, us, is all we ever own. That's what we take with us no matter what happens in
life, no matter what changes or who we lose or what we lose, we always take us with us to the
next thing. So I like to be a little ruthless about this and say to myself, the real source of my value
is me. And if I know that, I know that I can manage anything else in life that changes. Anything that
happens. Will I be hurt? Will I be heartbroken? But the source of my value and my power is still
with me because I'm the only thing I ever truly own while I'm still here. There's a wonderful
story of Margaret Atwood at a certain stage in her life, walking around her house and realizing that
it wasn't her house. That this place that she had called her own for so long didn't really belong to
her. That one day she wouldn't be here anymore and it wouldn't be thought of as her house anymore.
Someone else would be in that house.
There's something humbling about that
and many people may even see there
being something intensely melancholic about that.
But I also see it as a pressure valve.
That when we realize that everything is transient,
everything is borrowed or rented,
we can stop gripping onto it so tightly.
And even while we're here, these things and people we acquire will come and go, but we
are the thing that will always remain.
So never ever transfer your power and your value to the golden eggs.
Always keep it with the goose.
Thank you so much for watching everybody.
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Let me know what meant something to you,
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And I look forward to seeing you next time.
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of you, I will see you again in next week's video. Be well, my friends, and love life.